That is your worldview talking.
A Muslim will not say that the bible is God- inspired, a Christian does.
You know my comment was speaking categorically.
The Qur'an itself claims to be divine Revelation sent to Prophet Muhammad for mankind, the Bible contains no such books in it's compilation (
not even the famed Pentateuch).
The Bible's assorted books contain everything from narratives/biographical accounts to poems/hymns, to letters etc.
Remember I'm speaking categorically here.
You believe those books are 'inspired', as most Christians and Jews do, this is ok (afterall there is truth in it), but you have to really think more clearly about what you are upholding within the scope of the Abrahamic tradition. What Jews and Christians take claim to, is far less direct and confrontational than what Islam does from the offset. There is a reason for this. There is also a reason why no surviving sacred texts before the Qur'an claim to be direct divine revelation, and why all others are either just narratives, ritual-practice or hymns. Likewise, there is also a reason that since the beginning of history God has revealed itself to Prophets.